How do you get the honey flavor to stay?
Don't use it, if you want a beer that actually has a honey flavor. Or use just a little, and follow my suggestions.
When you add honey you are actually doing more to boost the ABV and dry the beer out, than to actually get any honey flavor.
That's the thing with people adding honey to beer, they really AREN'T getting much honey flavor in their beer, because
it is fermenting away to alcohol, like making mead.
Which unless you kill fermentation and back sweeten with honey that won't ferment, really doesn't have that much of a
sweet honey flavor.
To get a real honey flavor, use the darkest you can find, with the most concentration of flavor, or even better,
use Gambrinus honey malt ProBrewer Interactive - View Single Post - Honey Malt
So if you put a lot of honey in, it will have the same basic affect as adding table sugar to it...it's going to dry out and thin the beer.
If people want a real honey
taste then ad some honey malt to your grainbill you will be surprised...it will taste like most people want honey beers to taste.
In bottling the same thing is going to happen....only a little bit of "honey flavor" is going to come through, because most of it will ferment out. And it is really hard to control how much flavor is going to be left over. One thing to consider would be to use the darkest honey possible, so there is unfermentable left behind.
(Like bottling with brown sugar or even mollasses.)
I did an amazing Belgian Dark Strong with a couple pounds of Honey malt, and it was like what a honey beer SHOULD taste like. And I used NO HONEY at all!
BUT if you insist on using actual honey, then you need to find the darkest, and strongest honey you can find. Don't use your basic pale yellow honey, that is nearly completely fermentable. But the darker the honey the more UNFERMENTABLES to lend the honey flavor.
I was lucky enough to lay my hands on a jar of 50 year old honey for my 50th birthday Barleywine mentioned in my sig line.
Another option would be to further carmallezie your honey, just like we make caramel or dark candy syrup. Just boil it down for awile in a saucepan, then when you get it the color you want hit it with cold water (warning it will splash) to stop the reaction and add THAT to your beer.
There is a 15th century burnt honey mead called a brochet where that is the basic process. We also did that on my brew day.
This was not even as dark as we did the brochet, it went even darker. This WAS your basic cheap grocery store pale honey, but llok how dark it looks there, it turned some amazing colors.
This is how dark the mead finished out.
The flavor is really intense. Like what it is, honey caramel. And there will be flavor after it ferments.
Hope this helps.
